WhatsOn has handpicked the Art Exhibitions of the week. The Art Exhibitions of the Week are enthralling, mesmerizing, and amazing. Your weekend is going to shine with a lot of activity. Make your weekends more enjoyable by visiting these exhibitions. Art Exhibitions have always been an attraction as it is worth visiting these places. Check out the places where to visit for a great weekend and also on your weekdays to blow off that stress.
Richard Moose: Broken Spectre
18 Oct – 18 Dec

The Irish photographer has spent his career documenting the war’s course and migration’s pain. He has now turned his high-tech scientific imaging cameras on the devastation of the Amazon. This festival is set to happen in London. It starts at 10:00 70 minutes of genuine discomfort. The main film is all about pure sensory overload that is very, very unpleasant. A huge long screen updo showing rivers’ images is full of filth. There is a piece of machinery churning along forest paths. It is worth watching the reality.
For more information: 180thestrand.com
Soheila Sokhanvari: Rebel Rebel
18 Oct 2022 – 26 Feb 2023

This exhibition is happening at the Beech Street Barbican London. Entry to this exhibition is free. The paintings in this exhibition will happen to be tiny and bursting with color and detail. Each painting is having a collision with Western fashion. The 1970s interior décor and the beautiful traditional Iranian aesthetics make it more overwhelming. Pour Banayi stands with purple hair against a glittering night sky. The actress Faranak Mirgahari is pointing a revolver like a Wild West cowboy. Kobra Saeedi spiritlessly smokes a ciggie. Women from pre-revolution Iran are painted down frangible parchment with great detail by Soheila Sokhanvari.
For more information: www.barbican.org.uk
Alice Neel: There’s Still Another I See
18 Oct – 12 Nov
This exhibition is set to happen at 16 Wharf Road in London. Entry to this exhibition is free. Alice Neel, the American visual artist was a chronicler. His paintings were of great knowledge. The painter depicted a wretched glimpse and a beauty of her chunk of the city. Her paintings were all filled with a mixture of playful colorism. It also portrayed a haunting realism along with a touching tenderness. This amazing show upstairs at Victoria Miro is almost serving like a mini-museum exhibition. This exhibition is about Neel’s focus on things to which she repeatedly returned. Each portrait of a sitter is co-occurred by another of the same person. It is done at different times and different points in their lives.
For more information: www.victoria-miro.com
Marcus Coates: The Director
20 Oct – 30 Oct
This art exhibition is happening in various locations in Westminster. The exhibition in totality has the dominant sense of inescapability of the permanent scenarios. The fear, paranoia, anxiety, isolation, and sadness felt during the watch like to last forever. It is not an easy, pleasant, aesthetic art but there’s a lot more to it. It cannot happen to be a painting to brighten your living room or a sculpture for a bank lobby. The art of it is to shock and shake you to the core. This art is to leave you impactful with a feeling which completely enacts to ground down. The piece of brilliant art is exhausted and worn out, and art that gives people a voice.
Buy tickets at: https://www.artangel.org.uk/project/the-directors/
For more information: https://whatson.guide/art-exhibitions-of-the-week/